The Guardian (USA)

Facebook and Instagram ban antisemiti­c conspiracy theories and blackface

- Alex Hern

Conspiracy theories about Jewish people “controllin­g the world” are to be explicitly banned from Facebook and Instagram for the first time, after the company announced an update to its content policies on Tuesday.

The ban on “certain kinds of implicit hate speech” would also include content depicting blackface, Facebook’s vice-president of integrity, Guy Rosen, said.

Facebook and Instagram already bar users from posting hate speech, broadly defined as “a direct attack on people based on what we call protected characteri­stics”, such as race, sexual orientatio­n, or gender identity.

But the company also maintains a more narrowly defined list of “tiers” of hate speech, ranging from tier 1 (such as “content targeting a person on the basis of their aforementi­oned protected characteri­stic with dehumanisi­ng speech or imagery in the form of comparison­s to insects”) to tier 3 (which includes “content targeting a person on the basis of their protected characteri­stic with calls for segregatio­n”.)

Blackface and antisemiti­c conspiracy theories fall into those more strictly defined categories of hate speech, although Facebook has not yet updated the published guidelines to include those offences.

The failure explicitly to count antisemiti­c conspiracy theories as a form of hate speech was highlighte­d in July, when Wiley, the British rapper and DJ, posted a series of antisemiti­c comments on his Instagram account, after a similar rant on Twitter. The posts, which were widely condemned, initially led to a seven-day suspension from Instagram, with his account being fully deleted only five days later.

The delay prompted the home secretary, Priti Patel, to intervene, saying: “Social media companies must act much faster to remove such appalling hatred from their platforms.”

As well as the new rules, Facebook has committed for the first time to an external audit of its moderation reports, beginning in 2021. Vishwanath Sarang, a technical program manager at the company, said: “No company should grade its own homework and the credibilit­y of our systems should be earned, not assumed. We believe independen­t audits and assessment­s are crucial to hold us accountabl­e and help us do better.

“Measuring and reporting out these numbers on a regular basis, with the same frequency as we report our earnings and business results, is important. It lets others see how we’re doing and hold us accountabl­e – and it helps us measure progress and spot places where we’re not doing enough.”

 ?? Photograph: Burak Çıngı/Redferns ?? Wiley posted a series of antisemiti­c comments on Instagram, but his account was only fully deleted five days later.
Photograph: Burak Çıngı/Redferns Wiley posted a series of antisemiti­c comments on Instagram, but his account was only fully deleted five days later.

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